And in years to come, expect massive fires to erupt even more frequently. By one estimate, giant fires are occurring five times more often than in the past.

Advanced IoT and telemetry technology, however, are powerful new tools for monitoring fire dangers and helping crews respond to outbreaks, and rapidly changing weather conditions, in real time. Keeping that tech fine-tuned and functional requires the ingenuity and determination of teams of resourceful service technicians.

Tracking Fire Danger via the Cloud

Firefighting crews battling wildfires on the front lines need the latest environmental data to ensure their success, and Forest Technology Systems (FTS), a Vancouver Island-based company, helps provide it through a network of remote automated weather stations spread across North America.

Data from the roughly 2,400 remote weather stations across the U.S. is transmitted via satellite uplink to the National Weather Service. By monitoring humidity, precipitation, solar radiation and other conditions, these weather stations help government agencies such as the U.S. Forest Service and CalFire rate fire danger, predict fire behavior and deploy resources to combat forest fires.

In addition to its year-round weather stations , FTS provides its customers with quick-deploy portable weather stations that can be set up by one person in 15 minutes to monitor a controlled burn or the minute-by-minute fluctuations of a dangerous wildfire.

“If you’ve ever driven down the highway and have seen one of the roadside signs that indicate fire danger according to color — green, yellow, orange and red — data from an FTS weather station helped determine the rating,” says Zoë Fyfe, senior product manager at FTS.

Extreme Heat, Gators and Mountain Lions

According to federal regulations, each remote weather station’s sensors and instrumentation must be maintained once a year to ensure accurate data monitoring, no matter where they may be located. That’s where Jeremy Lichtenfeld, FTS’s service manager, and his stalwart field technicians come in.

“I’ve been to pretty much every U.S. state except for Hawaii and Alaska, and I’ve used snowmobiles, ATVs and even airboats in Florida to maintain or install equipment,” says Lichtenfeld. “While I’ve hiked up buttes, most of the monitoring sites in California are 4X4 accessible, but it still can be hours off-road.”

Jeremy Lichtenfeld in the field. Image: FTS

Lichtenfeld says FTS service techs typically travel in teams of two or three when installing or maintaining remote installations. Some of the occupational hazards the technicians have to deal with include encounters with alligators, rattlesnakes, bears and mountain lions, as well as toiling in extreme heat.

“We have wilderness training, including wilderness first aid,” says Lichtenfeld. “We use iridium or cell phones to check in every 30 minutes or more. Before we go out we try to establish connections with local (land management) agencies.”

Typically, Lichtenfeld says, teams can fit all the tools, replacement parts and first aid they need in a 4X4, but they sometimes need to use a helicopter when they have to actually install new devices, such as the 20-foot mast that is an integral part of a weather station.”Slinging equipment under a helicopter can get really expensive,” he says.

An Eye in the Path of the Wildfire

Besides its stationary and quick-deploy weather stations, FTS has also developed a new camera-equipped “remote automated observations system,” or RAOS, that takes advantage of cellular networks, when available, or two-way connectivity offered by the Broadband Global Area Network.

“Fire behaviorialists use the remote cameras on the RAOS to determine where a fire will move next, and you can also catch forest fires in their infancy” says Fyfe. “Smoke can obscure the ground, making fires difficult to spot from the air. Having a camera on the ground makes it easier to determine what’s happening and deploy resources effectively.”

One of the company’s roughly 2,400 remote weather stations across the U.S. that help to predict fire behavior. Image: FTS

Fyfe says advanced environmental monitoring is helping officials make decisions more quickly, especially at the interface of forests and human settlement, where fires can be especially destructive.

“In remote areas that are hard to access, until now we’ve been transmitting information in the most cost-effective way,” says Fyfe. “When people start to encroach on these wild areas, there needs to be increased monitoring.”

One problem, according to Fyfe: Different organizations tend to gather their own data without coordinating how to share it, making decision-making difficult. But she expects that in the future that will change.

“It’s not enough that data ends up in the cloud,” she says. “Instead, edge devices such as environmental sensors will use a common protocol so data can be shared more easily. We need to get information to people faster so they can make intelligent decisions.”

About Nevin Thompson

Nevin Thompson is a journalist, copywriter and a content strategist who works in a variety of different verticals.